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#51
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Bullying desguised (badly) as precaution
If I was there with my daughter, and he started coming at me and my daughter
with a baton, I would have to consider doing a double tap, and one. Although your way was for the best. "AJ" wrote in message ups.com... I took my daughter to Linden Airport (that's in New Jersey). We stood with a small crowd at the fence on the shopping mall side as planes took off and landed. (This is where I got my interest in flying many years ago.) .... The police never came, but the guard came back, more belligerent than before. Now he started shouting at the crowd and reaching for his baton. I told him, "You hit me, and my lawyer will eat you for |
#52
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Bullying desguised (badly) as precaution
"Steven P. McNicoll" wrote in message link.net... "Jim Burns" wrote in message ... And the government doesn't pay us NOT to produce corn. They pay us the difference between the daily market price and the government posted price up to a maximum of $40,000 per year total. They also pay a loan deficiency payment based on the per bushel price of corn that they would loan using your corn as collateral vs. the actual market price, up to a maximum of $65,000 total for the crop year. Where does the Constitution give the government the power to do that? Not that I agree but I'd bet they would use an interstate commerce argument if they had to defend it in court. They use it for just about everything else. |
#53
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Bullying desguised (badly) as precaution
"Gig 601XL Builder" wr.giacona@coxDOTnet wrote in message news:iKr7f.12$0M1.11@dukeread12... Not that I agree but I'd bet they would use an interstate commerce argument if they had to defend it in court. They use it for just about everything else. Yup. That's not a valid argument. |
#54
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Bullying desguised (badly) as precaution (long reply to Jay H.)
I'll think about the C-150 thing. That's the little plane I did some
training in about 15 years back (or was it a 152, i don't recall). I'm going on 49: is that to late to pick up where I left off? I think not, especially since I did training and can probably progress to the stall stuff pretty fast. Anyway, what's to lose? What this is all about: I and my family have owned properties in a certain area of southern New Hampshire for years, with intent to retire there. Over the years, the local airport (about five miles away) has gotten busier and busier. Last summer, the noise was just out of control. Low flights all hours of the day and night. A certain Mooney and Bonanza were the worst offenders: low (well under 1000 feet), loud, and frequent (constant on sunny weekends). I called the airport manager two or three times, and got push back, so I stopped calling. Calling people at the FAA was a complete waste of time, even when I spotted the N-number, which is damned hard from the ground. They demand "proof," which they make impossible to provide, and they refuse to investigate. Then, to make matters worse, I find out the local airport, which is purely GA and already has a 5000 ft runway, towered, the works, wants to do "saftey improvements." Well, the "improvements" involve building another runway and/or lengthening the existing runway to 5500 feet. All in the name of "safety." Well, I may be crazy, but I am not stupid. No GA prop plane needs that much asphalt to land safely. I know an expansion plan disguised as safety project (to make it seem more politically palitable) when I see it. I attended the public info session on the "safety improvements". It was obvious that the meeting was really just another bum rush. The only people there were the presenters, interested (financially) parties, and people upset about the noise. Armed with my research, I asked many specific questions that they were not ready to answer. It was quite clear that they simply wanted to check off the box required to get the 95% FAA grant. Since the FAA and the airport gave us the bum rush already, I did a bunch of additional research, and went the political/editorial route. Then I uncovered dirt (admitted EPA violations by an FBO, a long expired Part 150 study, key parts of which were never implemented and simply shelved, requests to the sponsoring city for operating subsidies when the city was already experiencing a budget crunch, etc.) I publicized it to elected officials, government agencies (e.g EPA) and the press. This used to be a pretty quiet area, but the airport has turned into a major nuisance. Now, we are thinking of selling a property we recently acquired and seriously thinking about moving somewhere else. To be honest the noise levels have dropped considerably -- just a few a-holes now. Not sure why: I don't bother calling the stupid airport anymore. Their credibility registers as zero on my meter. Anyway, the expansion project is on hold way due to environmental issues (mainly water, as the airport unfortunately sits directly atop the acquifer for the entire area). All we want is the airport to make a better effort to enforce its existing noise abatement procedures, which are routinely ignored by a small minority of fliers. |
#55
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Bullying desguised (badly) as precaution
Actually it's in the USDA Ag budget. Congress says the USDA can have a
budget, then approves an amount. The USDA decides how it doles it out. They can also go back to Congress and ask for emergency funds.... watch what happens to the orange growers in FL this winter. Disaster assistance money will flow through the USDA to them. Jim |
#56
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Bullying desguised (badly) as precaution
"Jim Burns" wrote in message ... I'm always willing to try to explain the government subsidy program to someone ONCE. Can you explain where the Constitution gives the government the power to create the subsidy program? |
#57
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Bullying desguised (badly) as precaution
"Jim Burns" wrote in message ... Actually it's in the USDA Ag budget. Congress says the USDA can have a budget, then approves an amount. The USDA decides how it doles it out. They can also go back to Congress and ask for emergency funds.... watch what happens to the orange growers in FL this winter. Disaster assistance money will flow through the USDA to them. Where does the Constitution give the government the power to create the USDA? |
#58
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Bullying desguised (badly) as precaution
Steven P. McNicoll wrote:
Where does the Constitution give the government the power to create the USDA? As with other branches of the Executive, Congress didn't create the USDA - they just fund it. In this case, Lincoln created the USDA in 1862. The part I find myself scratching my head over is this (from http://www.usda.gov/wps/portal/!ut/p/_s.7_0_A/7_0_1OB?navtype=MA&navid=ABOUT_USDA): "USDA brings housing, modern telecommunications, and safe drinking water to rural America." What do housing, telecommunications and drinking water have to do with agriculture?? -- John T http://tknowlogy.com/TknoFlyer http://www.pocketgear.com/products_s...veloperid=4415 Reduce spam. Use Sender Policy Framework: http://spf.pobox.com ____________________ |
#59
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Bullying desguised (badly) as precaution
"John T" wrote in message m... As with other branches of the Executive, Congress didn't create the USDA - they just fund it. In this case, Lincoln created the USDA in 1862. But under what Constitutional authority? |
#60
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Bullying desguised (badly) as precaution
"John T" wrote in message
m... As with other branches of the Executive, Congress didn't create the USDA - they just fund it. In this case, Lincoln created the USDA in 1862. snip -- John T and before that versions of it were part of the Patents Department, then the Department of Interior. Strange beginnings, but based around preserving and improving seed genetics. Jim |
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